Viewpoint |
October 7


Yumna Zahid Ali challenges the narrative that Oct. 7 marks the start of the Gaza conflict. It details a continuous timeline of control, siege, and violence dating back to 1948.


by Yumna Zahid Ali, Guest Commentator



The war did not begin on October 7, 2023, no matter how loudly that date is repeated to erase the long history of occupation and conflict that came before it. October 7 is used as a license to forget, a convenient starting line that allows seventy-five years of dispossession, occupation, siege, and repeated military assaults to be reduced to historical ash. But the testimonies of the oppressed do not work that way.

oursentinel.com viewpoint
Wars do not begin when the powerful decide to start counting; they begin when people are uprooted from their land, dignity, safety, and any right to futurity, and Gaza’s story begins in 1948, not in 2023.

In 1948, during what Palestinians call Al-Nakba, or “The Catastrophe,” the creation of the State of Israel came with the forced displacement of at least 750,000 Palestinians from their ancestral land. Entire villages were cleared, homes demolished or seized, and families sent into exile under the illusion that it was only for a short time. It was not. Those refugees were never allowed to return, and Gaza became one of the places where their descendants were compressed into a narrow strip of land where loss was perpetuated, not remembered. When Gaza is bombed today, it is not just a city under fire; it is a refugee camp built on an unresolved crime.


... a diplomatic solution over time revealed itself as management of the conflict rather than its resolution, breeding disillusionment instead of reconciliation.

In 1967, Israel occupied the Gaza Strip following the Six-Day War, placing its population under military rule and control. From that moment forward, Gaza’s residents did not control their borders, their airspace, or their freedom of movement. Daily life was regulated by an occupying power that could decide who traveled, who entered, who passed through a checkpoint, who received medicine, and who would have their name crossed out. This was not a temporary emergency measure; it was the normalization of domination, and it hardened a sense of injustice, not because Palestinians rejected peace, but because they were never offered freedom.

By 1987, that pressure escalated into the First Intifada, a mass uprising driven largely by civilians who used protests, strikes, and civil disobedience to confront decades of occupation. It was not an armed invasion but a civilian-led revolt born from humiliation and dehumanization, and it was met with ferocious military force, mass arrests, beatings, and live ammunition. This was the state screaming its only truth: “We have the guns. Your justice is a fantasy. Obey.”

The 1990s brought the Oslo Accords, which were sold to the world as a peace process but felt to many Palestinians like an agreement to keep talking about…an agreement that would never come. While a Palestinian Authority was created, real sovereignty never followed, and Israel retained decisive control over borders, armed enforcement, and colonization. Settlement expansion continued in the West Bank, occupation remained intact, and Gaza was targeted for further degradation. What was presented as a diplomatic solution over time revealed itself as management of the conflict rather than its resolution, breeding disillusionment instead of reconciliation.

In 2005, Israel announced its unilateral “disengagement” from Gaza, withdrawing settlers and soldiers from inside the strip while keeping its chokehold over its airspace, territorial waters, population registry, and all land crossings. Gaza was not freed; it was sealed. Its people could not move, trade, or rebuild freely, and the territory became dependent on an occupying power that claimed it was no longer responsible while still maintaining a remote-controlled siege. This contradiction was the catalyst for what followed.


This was not an accidental escalation. It was a one-sided, deeply imbalanced war.

When Hamas won Palestinian elections in 2006, Gaza was placed under a strangling blockade by Israel, with Egypt’s cooperation and Western backing. This was not a counter-terrorism operation; it was collective punishment imposed on over two million people, most of them civilians, many of them children still in diapers. The blockade crippled Gaza’s economy, restricted food, medicine, fuel, and construction materials, and trapped every last soul in a sealed enclosure. Despair deepened, and the world largely accepted it as necessary.

What followed were repeated military assaults that reinforced the reality of Gaza as a place where civilian life was expendable. In 2008–2009, Operation Cast Lead killed around 1,400 Palestinians, including hundreds of children, while Israel lost 13 people, several from friendly fire. In 2012, Operation Pillar of Defense left 167 Palestinians dead in just eight days. In 2014, Operation Protective Edge devastated Gaza over 51 days, killing more than 2,200 Palestinians, over 500 of them children, and flattening densely populated city quarters while Gaza remained shrink-wrapped and unable to shelter its people. Each assault cycled back to the same four words: ceasefire, rubble, blockade, trauma.

In 2018, Palestinians attempted a different form of resistance through the Great March of Return, where largely unarmed protesters demanded an end to the blockade and the restitution of their right of return to the homes dispossessed in 1948. They were quelled with sniper fire. Over 200 were killed, thousands were wounded, many were permanently disabled, and dozens of children were brutalized by bullets. Even the protest was treated as a threat to be eliminated rather than an appeal for humanity to be heeded.

The punitive pattern continued through May 2021 and August 2022, with further Israeli operations killing hundreds more Palestinians, including many children, while Gaza remained stranded, impoverished, and futureless. This was not an accidental escalation. It was a one-sided, deeply imbalanced war. One side owns the prison and writes the news. The other digs graves and waits to be bombed again.

To claim that the war began on October 7, 2023, is not an act of providing a complete picture; it is an act of distortion and falsification. It erases the refugee camps, the occupation, the blockade, the bombings, the crushed protests, and a childhood defined by sirens. It reframes history so that violence appears spontaneous rather than inevitable, detached rather than provoked. October 7 represents a critical node in a continuous historical sequence…one that begins not in 2023, but in 1948, with the foundational injustices that have defined the conflict ever since.

“You cannot bury seventy-five years of suffering under one date and then call it honesty.”


About the author ~

Yumna Zahid Ali is a writer and educator who spends her free time reading, analyzing literature, and exploring cultural and intellectual debates. When she’s not writing for global audiences, she enjoys reflecting on societal issues and using her voice to challenge inequities, especially those affecting women. She also loves diving into history, believing that remembering the past is an act of defiance and a way to hold power accountable.




TAGS: Gaza war historical context, why Gaza conflict did not start October 7, Gaza history since 1948 opinion, Israel Palestine conflict long-term analysis, Gaza blockade and occupation explained

Area prep basketball scores and recaps from Friday


Here is a quick roundup of basketball scores and performances for area teams on January 23.

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Tyler Henry dribbles the ball during Unity's Christie Clinic Shootout game against Warrensburg-Latham. Henry scored 17 points in Friday's home game against Prairie Central.

Boys Basketball

Unity tops Prairie Central on the road

Improving to 18-2, the Rockets used another fourth-quarter outburst to down another opponent. Down 41-37, Tyler Henry led a fourth-quarter rally with eight points to finish with a game-high 17. Tre Hoggard, who converted seven times on his eight trips to the free throw line, supplied 14 points


Boys' Area Scoreboard


St. Joseph-Ogden 55, Monticello 45
Unity 59, Prairie Central 48
Arthur-Lovington-Atwood-Hammond 67, Heritage 60
Champaign Central 57, Salem 53
Rantoul vs St. Thomas More - no score reported
MacArthur 72, Mahomet-Seymour 36


Girls Basketball

Girls' Area Scoreboard


Champaign Central 58, Mt. Zion 49
Centennial 64, Urbana 46




Photo of the Day |
The eye for pie


From the extensive archive of photos from the iphotonews.com, here is the photo of the day for January 24, 2026.

Photo: PhotoNews Media/Clark Brooks

Savoy, IL - Deanna Bramer, 12, of Savoy, takes a moment to chew while competing in the Orchard Days pie eating contest on October 21, 2006, while dentist and contest official Dr. Alan Broadbent looks on. The annual two-day event featured an open car show, 5k run/walk, local music entertainment and carnival rides for kids.



Thursday prep basketball recaps and scores for January 22


Here are recaps and scores from area girls and boys basketball games last Thursday.


Girls Basketball

Strong effort in the paint notches Oakwood victory

The Lady Comets hauled in 28 rebounds with frosh Ashtyn Dailey and senior Caydence Vermillion's pulling eight each. Vermillion and sophomore Lainee Smith led the team's scoring effort with ten points in their 31 minutes on the hardwood.

Hurie post double-double in win over Pontiac

Bloomington Central Catholic's Emme Hurie led the Saints to a 56-50 conference win over Pontiac with 21 points and 10 rebounds. Taylor Cook finishd the Illini Prairie Conference matchup with 13 points and led the team with five steals. Maddi Welch chipped in 11 points, seven rebounds and snagged three steals to help BCC improve to 11-9 overall and 4-1 in conference play.

Next up, Central Catholic hosts Quincy Notre Dame (16-4) on Saturday at 12:30 p.m.


Roseman steps up for Eagles in victory over STM

Josie Roseman dropped 15 points in Rantoul's Thursday night home game against St. Thomas More. Erykah Baltimore finished with 11 points while six other players contributed for the cause. The Eagles improved to 12-12 after picking up their second conference victory and play again on Monday, hosting East Peoria.

Cyclones fall to Illineks

Cornerstone Christian's Annika Risinger scored 13 points in the Cyclone's 39-28 loss to Urbana University High School. Sophomore Trinity Kalmes chipped in eight points as the team slips to 1-10 on the season.

Bickers finishes big for Rockets in conference win

Unity improved to 3-2 in Illini Prairie Conference action on Thursday with a 50-48 win over Prairie Central. Grace Bickers, who was 7-for-8 from the free throw line, led all scorers with 19 points. Kendal Zerrusen and Claire Meharry finished with nine point each. The Rockets host Bloomington Central Catholic on Tuesday and travel to Monticello on Friday to close out the first month of the year on the hardwood.

SJO picks up win 14th win

St. Joseph-Ogden rode a 13-point halftime into victory lane, beating visiting Monticello 54-47. Katie Ericksen finished with 18 points to lead all scorers in the victory to maintain SJO's second place standing in the Illini Prairie Conference. Fellow senior Kayla Osterbur finished with 14 points and was a perfect 10-for-10 from the charity stripe. Hayden Dahl made three treys to round out the top three Spartan scorers with nine points.


Girls' Area Scoreboard


St. Joseph-Ogden 54, Monticello 47
Oakwood 38, Georgetown-Ridge Farm 30
Central Catholic 56, Pontiac 50
Rantoul 50, St. Thomas more 35
Urbana University 39, Cornerstone Christian 28
Tri-County 51, Heritage 32
Unity 50, Prairie Central 48
Mahomet-Seymour 47, Normal University 43


Boys Basketball

Hoopeston beats GR-F

Brayden Walder scored 19 in the Cornjerkers' 50-36 win over the Buffaloes on Thursday. Nick Cardenas delivered 11 points and seven rebounds, while senior Cole Miller finished with six points and seven rebounds. On tap next, Hoopeston faces Salt Fork at home on Saturday.


Boys' Area Scoreboard


Bismarck-Henning 54, Armstrong 46
Westville 81, Oakwood 46
Rantoul 58, Charleston
Hoopeston Area 50, Georgetown-Ridge Farm 36




UI Extension to host food protection manager course in Champaign County


Food service workers can strengthen their food safety credentials through a certified workshop hosted by University of Illinois Extension. Participants must attend both sessions to qualify for the exam. Fees include materials, testing, and lunch.


CHAMPAIGN - Whether you run a kitchen, prep the line, or manage food service staff, staying current on food safety rules is no longer optional — and a February workshop in Champaign aims to make it manageable.

Food service workers looking to strengthen their kitchen safety credentials will have an opportunity this February as University of Illinois Extension offers a Certified Food Protection Manager Course in Champaign.

Photo: Peter Muniz/Unsplash

Students will learn safe food handling practices, cleaning and sanitizing procedures, and cover food safety in order to pass a certification course.
The two-part training will be held at the Champaign County Farm Bureau auditorium, 801 N. Country Fair Drive, and is open to adults and youth ages 15 and older. The course is accredited by the American National Standards Institute and meets the Illinois Department of Public Health’s Food Service Sanitation Code requirements.

Participants will receive instruction aligned with the FDA Food Code, covering food safety and contamination, employee health and hygiene, safe food handling practices, cleaning and sanitizing procedures, and Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points, commonly known as HACCP.

The workshop is structured over two days, and participants must attend both sessions to be eligible to take the certification exam. Classes are scheduled for Friday, Feb. 6, from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m., and Saturday, Feb. 7, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Lunch will be provided during the Saturday session.

The registration fee is $100 for adults and $60 for youth, which covers educational materials, the certification exam, and lunch. Space is limited, and advance registration is required.

To register or learn more, visit go.illinois.edu/CFPM-CC.

Those needing reasonable accommodations to participate may contact Rachel Mannen at rmannen@illinois.edu or Mynda Tracy at mynda@illinois.edu.


TAGS: Certified Food Protection Manager Champaign, food safety training Illinois Extension, Champaign County food sanitation course, HACCP training Champaign Illinois, Illinois food service certification workshop

Large farm auction coming in March near Rantoul


Polk Auction Company will host a two-day auction March 20-21 at 1269 CR 3200 N, Rantoul, Illinois. Items from the estate of Albert Warner will be sold at four separate locations. A sale preview will be held March 19 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Online bidding will be available at Polkauctionlive.com. A buyer's premium applies for farm implements and all other items for both online and in-person purchases. See flyer for details or contact Polk Auction Company at (877) 915-4440.


Unity sports schedule for January 22


Unity Athletics
Here is today's schedule of Unity Rockets games you can watch at home, at the office, or on the road. Even if you can't be there in person, don't miss the Rockets' exciting moments and watch online.



Unity Sports

Junior Varsity Girls Basketball

VS PRAIRIE CENTRAL | 5:30 PM Central

.::. WATCH THE GAME LIVE


Middle School Girls Volleyball

VS ARCOLA | 5:55 PM Central

.::. WATCH THE GAME LIVE


Varsity Girls Basketball

VS PRAIRIE CENTRAL | 7:00 PM Central

.::. WATCH THE GAME LIVE




Sentinel area prep basketball scores for January 21


Here is a quick roundup of basketball scores and performances for area teams on Wednesday, January 21.


Girls Basketball

Girls' Area Scoreboard


Salt Fork 52, Hoopeston Area 25
Urbana University 34, Chrisman 28


Boys Basketball

Central suffers loss to Centrailia

With a near silent contribution from the Maroons' senior class, who combined for just six points, junior Cayden Love led the Maroons with 18 points in the team's road loss to Centralia on Wednesday. After turning in his season-best 15 points against Centennial, sophomore Landyn Sutton, was held to just seven points. Love and another sophomore, Elijah Young, carried the team's rebounding effort with three each.

Parker Fitch drops 20 on Manteno

Following up a 16-point, seven rebound night against Prairie Central, St. Joseph-Ogden's Parker Fitch was a threat no matter where he was on the court against Manteno. The senior was 4-for-6 inside the arc and made three out of seven shots on the other side for 20 points. Lane McKinney added nine points and Nolan Franzen finished with 8 points, leading the team in rebounding with seven. Kaden Wedig also delivered nine points and six boards.


Boys' Area Scoreboard


St. Joseph-Ogden 59, Manteno 33
Centralia 66, Champaign Central 40


Coaches: Email game stats or score book to sport@oursentinel.com to include your team in our area basketball score reports.



Bulletin Board |
Upcoming area event announcements


The latest flyers and bulletins for upcoming events in and around Champaign County.

CHAMPAIGN - New Beginnings Outreach is hosting a Job Fair at Restoration Urban Ministries on Febraury 28 from 1 - 4 p.m. at 1213 Parkland Court in Champaign. The event co-sponsored by UA Local 149, The University of Illinois, Carle Health, Parkland College and the Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District.

For more information contact Damen Rowell at Damenrowell1234@gmail.com or call (217) 390-8129.


Submit your flyer for an upcoming community event
.

Depth and pins propel St. Joseph-Ogden to second at IPC wrestling tournament


St. Joseph-Ogden placed second at the Illini Prairie Conference Wrestling Tournament with a 6-1 record. The Spartans swept six duals and fell only to Unity in the championship matchup. SJO opened the tournament with three lopsided wins on Friday.

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

SJO's Vance McComas wrestles IVC's Mason Talley in their 190 pound match. McComas pinned Talley at 3:34 for the win. St. Joseph-Ogden went on to win the dual at the conference meet 72-9.

ST. JOSEPH - St. Joseph-Ogden put together a dominant two-day showing at the Illini Prairie Conference Wrestling Tournament, finishing second overall with a 6-1 record and sweeping its six non-Unity duals in convincing fashion. The weekend was yet another sign that Spartan wrestling program is making positive strides back to its position of one of the area's top Class 1A wrestling programs with the return of the Gallo family leading the program after a 16-year hiatus.

The Spartans’ only conference tournament loss came against eventual champion Unity, which secured its seventh league title. SJO controlled the rest of the field, placing ahead of Monticello, Pontiac, Illinois Valley Central, Prairie Central, Rantoul and St. Thomas More.

St. Joseph-Ogden opened the round-robin tournament Friday with a 71-6 rout of Prairie Central, followed by a 72-9 win over Illinois Valley Central. The Spartans closed the first day by overpowering Rantoul 59-9, establishing early momentum behind depth throughout the lineup.

Saturday began with a 48-33 victory over Pontiac, then a 57-24 win over Monticello. SJO capped its non-championship duals by cruising past St. Thomas More 72-12 before setting up a title-deciding matchup with Unity.


Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Spartans' Cam Getty settles in for a pin during his 126 pound match against Illinois Valley Central's Bradley Allen.

The championship dual began at 144 pounds, where Unity quickly seized momentum. The Rockets opened the match with a fall by Hayden Smith over Alec Bowlin at 144. The team from Tolono strung together victories at 150, 157, 165 and 175 to build an early 27-0 advantage by controlling the middle of the lineup.

St. Joseph-Ogden stopped the run at 190 pounds, where senior Vance McComas pinned Bradley Smith for six points. Unity responded at 215, as Chason Daley delivered a pivotal second-period fall over Liam Carter to extend the lead to 33-6.

At heavyweight, Cam Wagner won his seventh match in two days with a 40-second pin of Christian Sellers. Wagner added valuable team points despite limited competition, recording a pin against Pontiac and collecting multiple forfeits.

As the dual wrapped back through the lighter weights, St. Joseph-Ogden mounted a late surge. Levi Lee earned a first-period pin over Vincent Abon at 106 pounds. Sophomore Ben Wells followed at 113 with two takedowns before pinning Ian Skibbe 38 seconds into the bout. George Hale added another fall at 120 by pinning Deklyn Thomas, and Cam Getty capped the lightweight run with a first-period pin of Bryson Williams at 126.

The four consecutive wins gave SJO a 36-33 advantage heading into the 132-pound match, which the Spartans had to forfeit. In the final contested bout of the meet, Unity clinched the match and conference title with a technical fall by AJ Daly over Aiden Hundley.

Individually for the Spartans, Getty finished the tournament with five wins, all by pin, with his only loss coming in sudden victory against Pontiac freshman Jack Voigts.

Coy Hayes also posted six wins, including five pins and one forfeit, with his lone setback coming by major decision to Unity’s Abram Davidson.

Carter finished with five victories and one loss at 215 pounds. Four of his wins came by pin over opponents from Monticello, Pontiac, Illinois Valley Central and Prairie Central.


Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

St. Joseph-Ogden 157 pound wrestler Alex Vaughn pins Rantoul's Jordan Cross in the first period. The Spartans cruised to a 59-9 victory over the Eagles on Friday.




TAGS: St. Joseph-Ogden wrestling second place finish, Illini Prairie Conference wrestling tournament recap, SJO Spartans conference wrestling results, Illinois high school conference wrestling standings, Unity vs St. Joseph-Ogden wrestling dual


Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly reported the starting weight class of the dual meet between Unity and St. Joseph-Ogden. The match began at 144 pounds, not 106. The story has been updated to reflect the correct order of competition. We regret the error.

Unity wrestling runs the table to capture seventh Illini Prairie Conference title


Unity Athletics
Individual standouts powered Unity’s run through the tournament. Hunter Shike and Chason Daley both finished 6-0, recording multiple first-period pins. Freshman Hayden Smith added seven wins, contributing depth and bonus points.

Unity Athletics


ST. JOSEPH - Unity left little doubt about its place atop the Illini Prairie Conference this weekend. For Unity, it was a statement performance, blending individual dominance with team-wide consistency. With another conference championship secured, the Rockets will carry both momentum and confidence forged over two decisive days on the mat in the upcoming postseason.

Unity captured their seventh conference championship with a dominant two-day performance, running the table against all seven league opponents to claim the title and improve to 19-10 on the season. Entering the tournament as the No. 1 seed, the Rockets delivered on that billing from start to finish, combining depth, bonus points and timely pins to separate itself from the field.

The championship was effectively decided in Unity’s final dual, a 44-36 win over host St. Joseph-Ogden in what proved to be the Rockets’ stiffest test of the tournament. Despite losses at 106, 113, 120 and 126 pounds, Unity swung the dual with four pivotal pins. Hayden Smith sparked the run with a fall at 144, followed by Hunter Shike at 150 and Josh Heath at 175. Chason Daley sealed the win at 215 with a second-period pin of Liam Carter, providing the eight-point margin that held up at the final whistle.

Unity’s path to the title began Friday with a commanding sweep through the round-robin bracket. The Rockets opened with a 72-10 rout of St. Thomas More, then followed with a 65-9 victory over Prairie Central. They closed the first day by pulling away from Illinois Valley Central, 60-21, positioning themselves for a championship push on Saturday.

Momentum only grew on day two. Unity overwhelmed Rantoul 77-6 and Pontiac 55-20 in its morning duals before dispatching Monticello 54-24. That set the stage for the showdown with St. Joseph-Ogden, where Unity’s ability to generate falls in the middle and upper weights ultimately proved decisive.

Several Rockets delivered standout performances across the two days. Shike was flawless, finishing undefeated while making quick work of most of his opponents. He recorded pins in under a minute in four of his matches and capped his weekend with a first-period fall at 1:55 over St. Joseph-Ogden’s Nathan Daley in his toughest bout of the tournament. With one forfeit mixed in, Shike closed the event at 6-0.

Daley was equally dominant at 215 pounds, posting five victories, all by fall. His most competitive match came against Carter in the finale, ending at 3:49, while his other wins never extended beyond the first period. Like Shike, Daley also benefited from one forfeit to finish 6-0.

Freshman Hayden Smith added to Unity’s depth with seven total wins, three by forfeit. Wrestling at 144, Smith recorded victories over Nicholas Dunner of Rantoul, Braden Oppermen of Pontiac, Drake Weeks of Monticello and Alec Bowlin of St. Joseph-Ogden, contributing critical points throughout the weekend.

St. Joseph-Ogden finished second in the standings at 7-1, sweeping its other six duals with its lone loss coming against Unity. Monticello placed third, followed by Pontiac in fourth, Illinois Valley Central in fifth, Prairie Central in sixth, Rantoul in seventh and St. Thomas More in eighth.




TAGS: Unity Rockets Illini Prairie Conference wrestling championship, Unity High School wrestling conference title, IPC wrestling tournament recap Unity, Unity wrestling St Joseph Ogden dual meet, Central Illinois high school wrestling champions


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Sentinel area baseball scores for April 4

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